The Jerusalem Post

Delta flights resume after global power outage strands passengers

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Delta Air Lines Inc.’s flights gradually began taking off again on Monday after a power outage hit its computer systems, grounding planes and stranding passengers of one of the world’s largest carriers at airports around the globe.

The US airline said the power outage began at about 2:30 a.m. in Atlanta and that customers should expect “large-scale” cancellati­ons.

Delta said in an update at 8:40 a.m. that a halt on departures had been lifted, and some flights were resuming, although customers should expect delays and cancellati­ons.

The company said via Twitter that it had canceled about 300 flights due to the power outage.

The problems also meant flight informatio­n was not showing correctly on Delta’s website or on airport informatio­n boards, and this could also take time to resolve, the carrier said in the latest update.

According to website Flightrada­r24, some of the first flights to take off were from Amsterdam to the United States, while a flight from Phoenix to Atlanta was among the first to depart from a US airport.

Delta operates 5,000 departures a day and is a member of the SkyTeam alliance alongside airlines including Air France-KLM.

It also partners for transatlan­tic flights with Virgin Atlantic, which said its flights were operating normally but cautioned that passengers should check tickets in case their flight was due to be operated by Delta as part of a code-share agreement.

Delta said passengers booked for travel August 8-12 would be entitled to a refund if their flight is canceled or significan­tly delayed.

In airports around the world, passengers stuck in check-in lines or on planes waiting to depart took to Twitter to share photos and frustratio­n at the delays and to ask how a major airline could be grounded by a power cut.

A Delta spokeswoma­n declined to comment when asked about backup systems.

The glitch follows several high-profile computer problems faced by US airlines in the past year.

Budget carrier Southwest Airlines Co. had to halt departures last month after a technical outage, while American Airlines had to suspend flights from three of its hubs last September after technical problems.

Industry consultant­s say airlines face an increasing risk from computer disruption­s as they automate more of their operations, distribute boarding passes on smartphone­s and fit their planes with Wi-Fi.

 ?? (Joshua Roberts/Reuters) ?? PASSENGERS WAIT in line to check in after Delta Air Lines computer systems crashed, leaving passengers stranded at airports around the globe, as flights were grounded at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Washington, DC, yesterday.
(Joshua Roberts/Reuters) PASSENGERS WAIT in line to check in after Delta Air Lines computer systems crashed, leaving passengers stranded at airports around the globe, as flights were grounded at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Washington, DC, yesterday.

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